5285 Scheme I
VI CH,=CHCN
PPh,
Figure 1. The molecular geometry of n-CjHaCo(PPh3)[(PhC2C O Z M ~ ) ( M ~ O ~ C (V). H)Z]
T L d.,)
-.
I\
RC=CR' I11
cobaltacyclopentene intermediate which is successively attacked by diphenylacetylene. If no transfer of hydrogen occurred, this reaction is expected to produce a cyclohexadiene derivative (IX) according to the model
n
v
CH.=CHCNi
R'CICR'J
Ph
%
..
R'
I
R
Ph
VI11
H
VI1
IV
R R
CH?-CN,
= Ph
[;E-;] CH.=CHCS -PPh,
PhCECPh PPh,
I1
+
n-CjHjCo. C(Ph)=C(Ph). C(Ph)=C(Ph)(PPh3) (X), with methacrylonitrile, gave only IX (10%) and 1,2,3,4tetraphenyl-5-a-methylvinylpyridine (1 9 %) as organic products, and hence no hydrogen transfer was observed. Thus it is obvious that the relative coordination abilities between the acetylene and the olefins govern the reaction paths and consequently determine the products. Yasuo Wakatsuki,* Katsuyuki Aoki, Hiroshi Yamazaki The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research Wako-shi, Saitama 351, Japan Receiced March 18, 1974
I
of hydrogen6 affording the diene complex intermediate analogous to IV or VI. In contrast, the reaction of diphenylacetylene with methacrylonitrile produces a compound formulated as (PhCzPh)z(CHzC(Me)CN) (VIII), mp 190-191 O, in 3 2 0 z yield based on I.7 The ir and pmr spectral data of VI11 are best accommodated by the structure shown in the figure, in which one of the methyl protons of the methacrylontrile molecule has transferred to the diphenylacetylene carbon. Compound VI11 is presumably formed also via the (6) Hydrogen may transfer either from the attacking acrylonitrile to the cobaltacyclopentene a-carbon or from the @-carbonof the cobaltacyclopentene ring to the attacking acrylonitrile. Taking into account the model reaction V VI, the authors prefer the former case. (7) In these cooligomerization reactions, a considerable amount of cyclobutadiene complex, r-C5HsCo(PhCCPh)n, is obtained, which may be formed readily on heating X . 4 Therefore, the formation of X from I and diphenylacetylene is supposed to be a main reason for rather poor catalytic activity of I.
-.
IX
reaction V --* VII, but actually one of the methyl hydrogens transfers to the attacking diphenylacetylene molecule thus forming the straight-chain product. The alternative mechanism, Le., attack by methacrylonitrile upon the cobaltacyclopentadiene intermediate followed by hydrogen transfer has been excluded since the treatment of cobaltatetraphenylcyclopentadiene complex,
C0,Me
PPh,
I
Ph
CY
R
R' H
Scheme IJ
H?C=CCH,C(Ph) =C(Ph)C(Ph)=CHPh
a-C,H:Co
R (R)
Variations in Molecular Geometry along the Isoelectronic Series Coz(CO),, [F~CO(CO)~]-, and [Fe2(CO)B]zSir
C O ~ ( C Ois) ~an example of a compound whose solid state and solution structures are different. While X-ray studies' have indicated a C2t.,double CO-bridged structure (I) in the crystal, infrared studiesZhave shown that in solution the molecule exists as an equilibrium mixture of (I) and the nonbridged D 3 disomer (11). We wish to report that interesting changes occur in the geometry of this species as its charge is systematically varied (i.e., as each Co atom is replaced by Fe-). (1) G . G . Sumner, H. P. Klug, and L. E. Alexander, Acta Crysfallogr.. 17,732 ( I 964). (2) (a) K. Noack, Spectrochinr. Acta, 19, 1925 (1963); (b) G. Bor, ibid., 19,2065 (1963).
Coniriiimications 10 the Editor
5286
Figure 2. The molecular geometry of the [FeCO(CO)& anion. A
Figure 1. The molecular geometry of the [Fez(CO)8]z-anion. A crystallographic center of symmetry, which lies a t the center of the Fe-Fe bond, relates the two halves Of the molecule t o each other. The Fe-Fe bond distance is 2.787 (2) A.
oc,-co oc oc'
A y --
,co co-co 'co
oc I OC\ oc-co--0-co oc' 'co
0 I
Lo
/co
Table I. Selected Molecular Parameters in
[(Ph3P)2N]2+[Fez(C0)8]2-.2CHBCN Bond lengths
I1
[Fe2(CO),J2- was prepared in the manner of Hieber and Brenda13 and precipitated as its [(Ph3P)zN]+salt by addition of a methanolic solution of [(Ph3P)2N]+CI-. Recrystallization from a 2 : 1 : 1 mixture of acetonitrile, acetone, and ethyl acetate afforded red-brown crystals of [(Ph3P)2N]z+[Fez(CO)8]2-.2CH3CN: space group P i (piclinic); a = 17.942(4), b = 12.944 (3), c = 10.532 (3) A, a = 93;21 (2), p = 115.35 (l), = 106.72 (2)"; V = 2071.1 A 3 ; Z = 1; 3765 reflections (Mo K a radiation; 20 limit 45") were collected on a Nonius CAD-3 diffractometer. The structure was solved by heavy atom methods and refined to a present R factor of 8.87$4 The [Fe2(CO)8]2-anion has a D3dgeometry: (Figuze 1) with an unbridged Fe-Fe bond of length 2.787 (2) A. Table I lists average molecular parameters in the molecule. A crystallographic center of symmetry is situated at the center of the anion, and the two sets of staggered equatorial carbonyl groups are slightly bent toward each other, as expected.6 The configuration of [Fe2(CO)8]2- therefore resembles the structure of Co2(CO)8 in solution ; this finding confirms earlier infrared and Mossbauer studies' on this anion. The contrast between the solid state structures of Clvfor Co,(CO), and DSdfor [Fez(CO)s]2-now prompted (3) W. Hieber and G. Brendal, Z . Anorg. Allg. Chem., 289, 324 (1957). (4) Most computations in this work were performed using CRYM, an
amalgamated set of crystallographic programs developed by R. E. Marsh at the California Institute of Technology. Also used was UCIGLS, a group refinement program by R. J. Doedens and J. A. Ibers. (5) An earlier X-ray structure determination of the [Fe(en)aI2+salt of the [Fe*(CO)a]*-anion was reported as part of an abstract to the Seventh International Symposium of the International Union of Crystallography (F. s. Stephens, Actu Crystallogr., 21, A154 (1966)) but no details of the molecular structure were given other than that the anion had D3,i geometry. An Fe-Fe distance of 2.75 A for this compound was later quoted by Dahl: Footnote 56 in L. B. Handy, J. K. Ruff, and L. F. Dah1.J. Amer. Chem. Soc., 92,7312(1970). (6) R. Bau, S. W. I